Early-life peripheral infections reprogram retinal microglia and aggravate neovascular age-related macular degeneration in later life

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Abstract

Pathological neovascularization in age-related macular degeneration (nvAMD) drives the principal cause of blindness in the elderly. While there is a robust genetic association between genes of innate immunity and AMD, genome-to-phenome relationships are low, suggesting a critical contribution of environmental triggers of disease. Possible insight comes from the observation that a past history of infection with pathogens such as Chlamydia pneumoniae, or other systemic inflammation, can predispose to nvAMD in later life. Using a mouse model of nvAMD with prior C. pneumoniae infection, endotoxin exposure, and genetic ablation of distinct immune cell populations, we demonstrated that peripheral infections elicited epigenetic reprogramming that led to a persistent memory state in retinal CX3CR1+ mononuclear phagocytes (MNPs). The immune imprinting persisted long after the initial inflammation had subsided and ultimately exacerbated choroidal neovascularization in a model of nvAMD. Single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing (scATAC-seq) identified activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) as a central mediator of retina-resident MNP reprogramming following peripheral inflammation. ATF3 polarized MNPs toward a reparative phenotype biased toward production of proangiogenic factors in response to subsequent injury. Therefore, a past history of bacterial endotoxin–induced inflammation can lead to immunological reprograming within CNS-resident MNPs and aggravate pathological angiogenesis in the aging retina.

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Hata, M., Hata, M., Andriessen, E. M. M. A., Juneau, R., Pilon, F., Crespo-Garcia, S., … Sapieha, P. (2023). Early-life peripheral infections reprogram retinal microglia and aggravate neovascular age-related macular degeneration in later life. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 133(4). https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI159757

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